August 11, 2012
Alexander filling some big shoes at South Charleston
Chris Dorst
South Charleston quarterback Jon Alexander loosens up before a recent practice.
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Someone had to be the guy who followed Tyler Harris, and that someone turned out to be Jon Alexander.

Alexander, a mere sophomore, found himself taking over at quarterback last year for South Charleston with a daunting task - trying to live up to the accomplishments of Harris, the three-year starter who did just about everything one football player could do.

Harris directed the Black Eagles to back-to-back Class AAA state championships (2008-09) and the semifinals the following year. SC walked off the field a winner in 39 of 41 games those three years, though it later had to forfeit a playoff semifinal win in 2010.

Also, Harris won the 2009 Kennedy Award as the state's top player, was twice a first-team all-state pick and earned team MVP honors during the 2008 Super Six title win in Wheeling.

So when Alexander took over at quarterback last fall to lead a bunch of other youthful players, it was nearly a no-win situation. He certainly couldn't match Harris' production in that scenario and SC ended up 5-5 and out of the playoffs.

But when South Charleston coach John Messinger was pointing out his most-improved players last week, Alexander was at the top of the list.

"He's grown up,'' Messinger said. "He's matured a little bit. He's matured not only on the field, but in the classroom. Now he's never going to be a Tyler Harris-type and to me, that's wonderful. And I'm not saying that out of anything Tyler Harris ever did wrong because that was self-evident. Tyler was Tyler and there was none better, in my opinion. He was a winner.

"No matter what the situation or what the game or where you were on the field, you could always count on Tyler to get you to the end zone. Jon is starting to be that and understand that. But he's going to do it in a different way. He may not run over somebody like Tyler did, but he's got the ability to get around somebody.''

Alexander had his moments last year.

He threw for 262 yards and three touchdowns in a victory over Ripley and ran for 96 yards in the same game. He passed for 173 yards and three scores on Nitro and rushed for 61 more. Against Riverside, Alexander threw for two TDs and ran for a third.

All told, he had 1,067 yards and 14 touchdowns passing and tacked on 429 yards and four scores on the ground. Not bad, especially for a sophomore and a first-year starter.

Messinger and his offensive coordinator, Donnie Mays, believe Alexander is ready to take the next step and guide the Black Eagles back to the glory days.

"What we're looking for from Jon, first and foremost, is we're looking for leadership,'' Messinger said. "We made it clear coming into this fall that this is his offense to run. He's got to go out there and he's got to make this offense click.

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